Lamniformes, Odontaspididae) from the Eocene of Antarctica Provides New Information About the Paleobiogeography and Paleobiology of Paleogene Sand Tiger Sharks

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Lamniformes, Odontaspididae) from the Eocene of Antarctica Provides New Information About the Paleobiogeography and Paleobiology of Paleogene Sand Tiger Sharks Rivista Italiana di Paleontologia e Stratigrafia (Research in Paleontology and Stratigraphy) vol. 124(2): 283-298. July 2018 THE SOUTHERNMOST OCCURRENCE OF BRACHYCARCHARIAS (LAMNIFORMES, ODONTASPIDIDAE) FROM THE EOCENE OF ANTARCTICA PROVIDES NEW INFORMATION ABOUT THE PALEOBIOGEOGRAPHY AND PALEOBIOLOGY OF PALEOGENE SAND TIGER SHARKS GIUSEPPE MARRAMÀ1*, ANDREA ENGELBRECHT1, THOMAS MÖRS2, MARCELO A. REGUERO3 & JÜRGEN KRIWET1 1*Corresponding author. Department of Paleontology, University of Vienna, Althanstrasse 14, 1090 Vienna, Austria. E-mail: [email protected], [email protected], [email protected] 2 Department of Paleozoology, Swedish Museum of Natural History, P.O, Box 50007, SE-104 05 Stockholm, Sweden. E-mail: [email protected] 3 Division Paleontologia de Vertebrados, Museo de La Plata, Paseo del Bosque s/n, 81900 FWA La Plata, Argentina, CONICET. E-mail: [email protected] ARKU To cite this article: Marramà G., Engelbrecht A., Mörs T., Reguero M.A. & Kriwet J. (2018) - The southernmost occurrence of Brachycarcharias (Lamniformes, Odontaspididae) from the Eocene of Antarctica provides new information about the paleobiogeography and paleobiology of Paleogene sand tiger sharks. Riv. It. Paleontol. Strat., 124(2): 283-298. Keywords: Chondrichthyes; Elasmobranchii; Ypresian; La Meseta Formation; biotic turnovers. Abstract. The first record of one of the most common and widespread Paleogene selachians, the sand tiger shark Brachycarcharias, in the Ypresian strata of the La Meseta Formation, Seymour Island, Antarctica, is pro- vided herein. Selachians from the early Eocene horizons of this deposit represent the southernmost Paleogene occurrences in the fossil record, and are represented by isolated teeth belonging to orectolobiforms, lamniforms, carcharhiniforms, squatiniforms and pristiophoriforms. The combination of dental characters of the 49 isolated teeth collected from the horizons TELMs 2, 4 and 5 supports their assignment to the odontaspidid Brachycarcharias lerichei (Casier, 1946), a lamniform species widely spread across the Northern Hemisphere during the early Paleo- gene. The unambiguous first report of this lamniform shark in the Southern Hemisphere in the Eocene of the La Meseta Formation improves our knowledge concerning the diversity and paleobiology of the cartilaginous fishes of this deposit, and provides new insights about the biotic turnovers that involved the high trophic levels of the marine settings after the end-Cretaceous extinction and before the establishment of the modern marine ecosystems. INTRODUCTION Naylor et al. 2012), several authors have recognized a set of plesiomorphic characters that are tradition- Living sand tiger sharks of the possibly para- ally used to distinguish sand tiger sharks from all phyletic family Odontaspididae include three large other lamniforms, including a short to moderate- sized species within the order Lamniformes, today ly long, conical or slightly depressed snout, weakly inhabiting marine tropical outer shelf and mesope- protrusible jaws, first dorsal fin in front of the pel- lagic habitats (Carcharias taurus) and cool-water inner vic origin, last gill-slit in front of the pectoral origin, shelf habitats (Odontaspis ferox and O. noronhai) of 156 to 183 vertebral centra, monognathic tooth het- the Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific oceans (Compagno erodonty, tearing-type dentition, teeth arranged in 1984, 2002; Cappetta 2012; Nelson et al. 2016). Al- less than 60 rows in each jaw having a tall and slen- though recent morphological and molecular anal- der main cusp, one to three pairs of lateral cusplets, yses suggested that Odontaspididae might not be and a root with well-separated lobes and marked by monophyletic (e.g., Shimada 2005; Martin et al. 2002; a strong nutritive furrow (Compagno 1999, 2002; Cappetta 2012; Nelson et al. 2016). Although Carcharias and Odontaspis are the Received: October 05, 2017; accepted: February 15, 2018 only genera having modern representatives within 284 Marramà G., Engelbrecht A., Mörs T., Reguero M.A. & Kriwet J. this family (Compagno 1999; Nelson et al. 2016), the chondrichthyans across the Paleogene of Antarcti- odontaspidid fossil record has a wide temporal and ca. geographic distribution, being indeed comprised of The aim of this paper is to provide the first at least 20 extinct genera with more than 50 spe- unambiguous record of one of the most common cies dating back to the Lower Cretaceous (Cappetta and widespread early Paleogene marine top preda- 2012; Shimada et al. 2015; Cappetta & Case 2016). tors, Brachycarcharias Cappetta & Nolf, 2005, in the Selachians from Paleogene sites, such as the La early Eocene La Meseta Formation of Seymour Is- Meseta Formation on Seymour Island (NE of the land. Paleobiogeographic, paleobiological and pal- Antarctic Peninsula), are of upmost importance for eoecological implications based on this occurrence understanding of the general patterns of abiotic dis- provide new insights into the biotic turnovers that ruptions during the Paleogene. In fact, these pred- occurred at a high trophic level of the marine food ators can document profound changes and turno- chain during the Paleogene. vers in marine ecosystems in concomitance to the Paleocene – Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM; ca. 55.5 Ma) and subsequent cooling phase towards GEOLOGICAL SETTING the establishment of the Antarctic ice sheet. PETM was followed by a middle to late Eocene transition The Eocene La Meseta Formation is exposed from the greenhouse world to icehouse conditions on Seymour Island, which is situated approximately (ca. 49–34 Ma) with marked deep-sea cooling of 100 kilometers SE of the northern tip of the Ant- about 7°C (e.g., Zachos et al. 2001, 2008; Miller et arctic Peninsula (Fig. 1). The highly fossiliferous al. 2005). The final cooling phase across the Eocene sediments of the 720-m-thick La Meseta Formation – Oligocene (E–O) boundary (ca. 33.7 Ma) result- represent the uppermost part of the infill of the ed in the disappearance of chondrichthyans from James Ross Basin, a back-arc basin developed on Antarctica (e.g., Kriwet et al. 2016). The vertebrate the eastern flank of the Antarctic Peninsula (Elli- fossils of the La Meseta Formation are mainly rep- ot 1988; Del Valle et al. 1992; Hathway 2000; Ma- resented by cartilaginous fishes, which seemingly renssi et al. 2006). This formation comprises mostly represents the major faunal components of the poorly consolidated clastic fine-grained sediments, pre-Oligocene Antarctic fish faunas (Kriwet et al. which were deposited in a deltaic, estuarine and 2016). Fossil chondrichthyans include more than shallow marine environment (Marenssi 1995; Ma- 35 species within 22 families of selachians, batoids, renssi et al. 1998a, b). The fossiliferous sediments and chimaeroids, which have been reported from belong to two groups, the lower Marambio Group different levels within the La Meseta Formation and of Late Cretaceous to Paleocene age including the at different localities on Seymour Island (see Welton Lopez de Bertodano and Sobral formations and the & Zinsmeister 1980; Jerzmanska 1988, 1991; East- overlying Seymour Island Group comprising the man & Grande 1989, 1991; Long 1992a, b, 1994; Cross Valley (middle – earliest late Paleocene), La Balushkin 1994; Cione & Reguero 1995, 1998; Dok- Meseta (late Paleocene – early middle Eocene), and tor et al. 1996; Long & Stilwell 2000; Kriwet 2005; Submeseta (middle Eocene – early Oligocene) for- Engelbrecht et al. 2016, 2017; Kriwet et al. 2016). mations (e.g., Zinsmeister 1982; Grande & Chatter- The Ypresian strata from which the elasmobranch jee 1987; Marenssi 2006; Montes 2013). The La Me- material of this study originated, date back about 15 seta and Submeseta formations, which have yielded Ma after the end-Cretaceous extinction, coinciding most vertebrate material up to now, are separated with a period of maximum morphological diversifi- and bounded by a prominent erosional surface (Ma- cation of major bony and cartilaginous fish lineages renssi 2006). The La Meseta Fm ranges from the (e.g., Kriwet & Benton 2004; Friedman 2009, 2010; Thanetian to the Lutetian, whereas the Submeseta Sorenson et al. 2014; Frédérich et al. 2016; Marramà Fm ranges from the late Lutetian to the Priaboni- & Carnevale 2017; Marramà et al. 2016a, b, 2017a) an/Rupelian. The La Meseta Fm is further subdi- and correspond to the latest phase of the early Eo- vided into six allomembers, namely: Valle de las Fo- cene Climatic Optimum (e.g., Reguero et al. 2012; cas (TELM 1), Acantillado I and II (TELMs 2 and 3 Kriwet et al. 2016). For this reason, these strata are in partem), Campamento (TELMs 3 in partem and crucial to reconstruct evolutionary dynamics of TELM 4), and Cucullaea I and II (TELMs 5, and 6 Brachycarcharias (Lamniformes, Odontaspididae) from the Eocene of Antarctica 285 Fig. 1 - Location and geological map of the Seymour Island, showing the Ypresian ho- rizons TELMs 2, 4 and 5 where teeth of Brachycarchari- as lerichei (Casier, 1946) were found. in partem), respectively, whereas the Submeseta Fm (Priabonian) may represent a real paleoecological includes three allomembers, Submeseta I (TELMs and stratigraphic signal since very few taxa adapted 6 in partem and 7 in partem), Submeseta II (TELM to cool waters have been recovered in these levels 7 in partem), and Submeseta III (upper TELM 7) (Kriwet et al. 2016). (Montes et al. 2013). Both stratigraphic schemes, al- The Cucullaea I Allomember crops out all lomembers and
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